64 As one old expert to another, don't you agree that it takes il pronounced Chin-zan-o VERMOUTH ITALIAN or DRY to Il1ix a perfect cocktail. . . ? - --- ........ -- .. . . .' II Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Inc. New York, N. Y. Sole Distributors ting game we've seen in a twelvemonth. However, there are not so many new rowdy games this season; the ones we liked best were table hockey and table shuffleboard. For a slower pace, there's Chinese Roulette, a sort of clock soli- taire on a board, and for more cerebral people, there's Edward Lasker's Go, adapted from the Japanese. Of course there are the old standbys among the grimmer games: roulette, hazard, and chuck-a-luck. Spalding has put all three in a good-looking games box of polished wood "( $50, complete), along with three hundred poker chips, a leather dice cup, and two decks of playing cards. It was especially de- signed for men who entertain more than one friend at a time; most boxes go in for chess, checkers, and back- gamlTIOn, which only two can play. We also approved of the silent bagatelle board at this shop. It has a composition bottom that even steam heat can't warp, and it won't make a sound. Just the thing for a man who lives in a small apartmen t, and only $ 7.50. Macy has a roulette out.fi t-a big wheel, layout cloth, and colored chips -in a case for $24.97. And Meyro- witz-who is interested in many things besides eyeglasses-has brought out the T alle- Rol, for keeping bridge scores. It's a metal frame that clamps on the edge of a table, contains a rol1 of paper on which you can write up to two hun- dred rubhers, and seIIs for $1. This shop is equalIy pleased with the Cyclope, which, by the way, would make a rather nice present to put in a Christmas stocking. \Vhen you look through one end, it's a 4-power Inon- ocular . You turn a small wheel in its side, and it becomes a 6-power magni- fier. Look through the other end, and it's a 9-power magnifier. The thing is ahout the size of a pocket flashlight, and comes in a pigskin case; $15. :F'or the stamp-collector, there is the Roto-Gage ($2.50), a compact affair with a per- foration gauge, a magnifying glass, a watermark-detector, and a gauge which will measure stamps hoth by the inch and by the millimetre. For the auto- mobilist who is considering venturing into the wilds, there is a new auto COlTIpaSS ($1.95) that can be adjusted to the sharp-angled windshields of the newest streamlined cars, and requires no separate compensator . You merely adjust a screw in the body of the com- pass itself. Finally, for the man who never was much good at mathematics, there's a pocket-size metal adding ma- chine; $ 9.95, and there are plenty of people we know who need one. Of NOVEMDER 2, , 1935 HOW MUCH MUST GOOD LIVING COST? Lots of folks think the essenØ tials of good living mean excessive rentals -'tiI they discover it's not so at modern GREENWICH GARDEN. Everything the right people want is here in this interest= ing síxø story garden apart= mente Service is continuous. Elevators run all night. Neighbors are pleasant. Every apartment is smartly planned, modernly equipped and tastefully decorated- sunlight and air flood in through casement windows. All in all, modest rental budgets buy rare value here I Apartments of 2, 3, 4 Rooms and Baths . . . Larger suites can be made available. Resident Manager aJutwv 72-84 BARROW STREET AT HUDSON /;imingJ(oo!7V 26-8 x 13 btcluding yoller!l' ...... :. :'. . i)resÚn.g ': ".11 J(dchen- C/o. Oil Ý((Wf1v ;:- :: <,vcr !f Ell () . . RH. II ::: .' : THIS UNUSUAL HOTEL SUITE with large dropped living room, concealed gallery beds, dress- ing room and complete kitchen from $6 daily Same rate for one or two persons ALSO LARGER SUITES Special Monthly Rates RESTAURAN"T M al1age1/len t DcuglasL.EllimanEi L ;